March 1993
Lee and I have had some problems but we seem to have
talked them out. I realize that we have a special relationship,
that of writers. He inspires me, gives me writing assignments. Today
he walked into the dining area where I was reading and said, "Give
me a 250-word essay on where pens go when they get lost." It was
funny. I actually did. Time goes by so fast. Lee spent some time
in Germany when he was younger and slept with the actor Udo Kier.
He talked to me for the first time about his HIV. He said he needs
someone to talk to once in a while, that living alone on the farm
can be lonely. I'm a little overwhelmed by all of it as I have spent
months in Chicago distancing myself from all those around me. I
like my space. I have been exploring the creeks, finding crawdads
and salamanders. I love sitting up in the hayloft where it is quiet
and still, watching the horses interact. I know that nothing is
easy and no one is constantly happy but I love it here, and tomorrow
I'm not taking that flight back to Chicago. Been writing letters
and stories.
Want to make a difference. I'm lying in my boxers
and feeling the heat from the woodstove as I write. Heat I have
created myself. Feeling very much in the present. Reading a book
of reflections geared toward people living with AIDS. A positive
little book. How we need reminders constantly. I deserve to grow
into myself and still love and be loved by my parents.
Cleaned up the barn while Eartha Kat played nearby.
She follows me everywhere I go like a dog and is just delightful.
Split wood in the sun, then stacked the logs on the front porch.
It looked like a postcard. I floated for a while on the raft in
the pond, in the silence, and felt the farm all around me. True
friends are those who write back. God, give me the power to continue.
Just stepped out to bring in more coal for the stove
and found the moon full. It's almost bright out. I could see rain
clouds moving in. Lee and I worked on the new brochure today. He
asks my opinion. I like that. Took a walk today. Eartha followed.
We followed the stream into the hills. Found an empty box turtle
shell, collected beautiful stones, sat on a log and reflected. Peed
off the front porch. How country! A very masculine man whose wife
is divorcing him because she suspects he's a homosexual visited
us. He was tall and handsome, talked about his children, and seemed
very sad. I wondered what it's like to come out so late in life,
with so much at stake. I suppose there is beauty even in tragedy.
Lee is filing for bankruptsy; we spent the entire
day in his office sorting through receipts and papers. It was really
difficult. At one point Lee's medication made him really ill. He
called to me from the bathroom where he sat huddled in a corner,
weeping and pale. He asked for a particular pill, which I fetched
for him immediately. My heart was racing I was so frightened. Later
I took a walk out to the main road to get the mail. On the way back
I saw a break in the barbed wire fence that separates Lee's property
from the neighbor's. I walked through this with the mail under my
arm until I came to a small hill. The sun beat down all around.
Curiosity, like a voice inside me, told me to walk on, see what
was on the other side. And there God unveiled a small quiet pond
where I stood almost disbelieving. In a daze I circled the pond,
breathed in the silence and the sun. Now the moon is full. I regret
not having taken another walk, but I had to write. I don't really
know what I'm doing but I guess anything I write is practice. Hightops,
the poodle, has gotten so fat she looks like a lamb. When she gets
excited she walks sideways, shakes her behind. I love her. My eyes
are tired. I must sleep.
Lee's gone into town for the day. After finishing
my chores I lay in the middle of my favorite pasture, the one on
the way to the pool. I just watched the blue sky. It was beautiful.
No thoughts came to mind. Hightops discovered a rat's nest and ate
the babies. I rescued one but I don't know if it'll survive. Now
I'm sitting on the raft, floating in the pond, writing. I just saw
a muskrat come out of the water and crawl into its hole along the
far bank. The ducks float like toys. I'm here. I wished for this
for so long. I try to imagine this place in the summer. I put leaves
on trees and scatter flowers everywhere. It looks beautiful. Wish
me strength.
It was a beautiful, sunny, warm day with a wonderful
wind that got even stronger as the day wore on. We filled the pond.
Snakes scurried. Two young men came and asked about horseback riding.
They asked what they could do in return for riding. Lee told them,
"Pay?" They asked how. Lee said, "Cash usually works just fine!"
I was shocked that scary hicks would even make such offers. I walked
the two visitors to the back to see the horses. Something about
them scared me. After they left I was angry that they'd brought
such negative energy to this peaceful piece of land. Now I'm not
sure if I'll like having a lot of guests here for the summer season.
Lee and I did some minor roof repairs on the barn, chased Hashish
and Andy from a section of land they had broken into. Dug a hole,
planted a tree. The wind blew open the door to Quail Road and when
Lee and I went to close it we found two chicken eggs inside the
cabin. I shot a gun for the first time. It was disturbing. And as
much as I didn't like it I sleep with a loaded gun under my bed.
It makes me feel safe since there aren't any locks on the doors
here, or children. The wood that was delivered today pops and cracks
as it burns. Life, what am I supposed to do with it?
Hightops scratches herself, See-spot goes to Eartha
Kat to play and the kitten rejects her, so, See-spot goes to Shortside
for support. He nips her fur with care. I've just started my fire.
Lee and I did some work in the house. I felt my usual dose of anger,
confusion, and frustration with him, but got over it. I see and
feel so much here that I love, but feel I must do more with it.
Capture it and give it to others. Somehow. Lee and I talked about
this. He said that it's the writer in me who wants this. Then he
added, "I would never say this to just anyone, but I write and you
are a writer!" There were tears in his eyes. Yes Lee, maybe someday
I'll even write about this place…
I'm almost obsessed with the idea that I am young.
I am young and so grateful. I don't want to be old and unhappy.
I simply want to be. I am excited about my life. And yes, there
will be more pain and tears, but I will always love and respect
myself. As the snow gently falls today I know and recall so many
lovely moments from the past. Even those terrible two days at the
institution after my suicide attempt. Nothing is bad tonight. This
feeling is incredible. Lee met with his doctor who told Lee that
he looks good. He said that my presence on the farm helps him. I've
always wanted to bring joy into people's lives and now it's happened.
But I am both an angel and a devil. Yes, human. Very human. The
farm has opened my mind. I feel so many things right now but as
always I also feel that I can't write about it as I wish. I do not
have the ability. Day by day. Moment by moment. Each breath. Head
held high. Looking out windows. Feeling. Writing. Hearing and smelling.
Understanding. This half-hour heaven within which I write could
change any minute, disturbed at any moment by anything.
The dogs are in bed with me. Oh, to be cluttered with
animals. A cat on my chest, a dog at my side, another at my feet.
It's medicine! Too bad they stink! But don't we always put up with
the faults of those we love? It snowed today. And snowed. And snowed.
As a matter of fact there are twenty inches of snow on the ground.
All over the farm the snowfall has created incredible shapes. I
had to search for the coal under mounds of snow. I bundled up and
went for a walk with my walking staff, camera, and the dogs. The
snow made the dogs so awkward. Hightops was almost buried fully
and had to hop through it. We trudged slowly to where the horses
were to feed them. They were covered in frozen snow, icicles hung
from their coats, mane, and tale. They shivered, which Lee says
is what they're supposed to. It broke my heart, though. Before heading
back the dogs and I rested in the barn. I thought of Jack London
and wondered if I would ever revise anything I write. Been reading
gay fiction. Just started "The Lost Language Of Cranes". Picked
it out of the many books in Lee's library. For now I will sleep
listening to the fierce wind that changes the shape of snow dunes
outside.
There's no feeling like the love I get from the cat
and the dogs who lie with me while I read. There are so many people
in life to know, love, and miss. People to remember. All the memories
are so fresh in my heart today. I feel them living and moving in
my chest. Why should it hurt? Sometimes I feel a joy in this kind
of powerlessness. The sentimental fool that I am. Thank God! Lee
and I walked in the snow today. Postcard beauty. Sunny. Land like
waves of white, white, white. We fed the horses. Lee left, but I
stayed behind. Every day I am mad at him for something. Every day
I try not to be. Every day I fail miserably.
I will be spoiled in my journal because I am not in
real life, or try not to be. Kitten between my arms while I lie
on my stomach writing. It was a terrible day. What's his name didn't
help any. Images of a sunny afternoon, driving, sun in my eyes,
horses behind fences and bushes, curves in the road. I can't tell
now if this was a dream or if it really happened. I'll never know.
Lee and I drove out to the mailbox. First time out that way in days.
Nothing. No letters. Danielle called. We talked endlessly. Laughed.
Disappointed when she talked about bars. I'm sick of it. Though,
the gay books I read make me miss bars. I didn't think I'd make
it today. There was that frightening feeling.
We went to Irve's farm next door. Irve lives and works
away in Virginia, but we visited with his sister Nancy. She served
us hot chocolate and poppy seed muffins. Nancy's white hair and
blue eyes, and the way she annunciates every syllable, remind me
of an English teacher. She's a riot. While Lee and Nancy talked
politics at the kitchen table I went exploring. I could see our
little house and our horses from Irve's property. Everything looked
so small and distant. I went into their barn, which is beautiful,
quiet, clean, and charming. I thought of Irve whom I've only met
once. Nancy had asked me to feed the cats and the doves. There were
many of them. The doves' calls were so hauntingly beautiful. The
smell of hay and animals took me back to the villages in Iran, where
some Assyrians still live, but very few. We used to go there in
the summertime because my father grew up in one such village. I
climbed up into the hayloft and imagined myself with a lover on
a hot summer night… I hate Lee, but I think I'm feeling this way
because I'm a brat! Or, maybe I have my reasons. I really don't
know. I knew this would not be easy, but I never imagined that it
would be this difficult. Sometimes I wonder what I'm doing here
and want to cry. But this is it, this is life. From the highest
moments of inspired confidence to this. To 'What'll happen to me?'
and 'What is our world about?' Anyway, the visit to Dear Run Farm
was a lovely experience. Grow, Emil, and love.
Alone today. Sat on a log on a hillside and watched
the horses graze. Andy approached me and showed affection. He sniffed
my hair and nudged me with his muzzle. In the distant hills I could
see the reflection of some deer, tiny against the sun. Patches of
snow remain. The dogs follow me everywhere. Got a letter from Timothy,
my prisoner pen pal. A bit needy and demanding. I wrote back immediately
and told him photos are not necessary. Fear and anger. "You're the
last person I'd worry about," Lee had said. Days come back in the
form of memories. Why? How? When? Days that are in my diary somewhere.
These naïve pages.
Lee, Rose, and I went into town for pizza. Rose is
the old lady from whom Lee bought the farm fourteen years ago. She
is a lovely little old, old woman. Her small home full of pictures
and cluttered with knickknacks. Over dinner Rose asked if I was
"Eye-talian". I tried not to laugh and said that I was Assyrian,
and of course had to explain what that means. When we dropped Rose
off at her home and took the windy roads back to the farm I wanted
to cry. I felt so sad for Rose who is old and lives alone. We drove
in silence while I feared getting old. I don't want to be afraid.
I think back over my life so far and cherish everything that's happened.
It's been wonderful. And I wonder if being here is merely a pause.
Is Lee valley Farm earth's Nirvana?
Rain. Friends call occasionally. We reminisce. Everything
looked beautiful today under the gray sky. Lee and I drove out to
a tiny post office by the side of the desolate road. I marveled
at the hills all around us. We stopped by Leigh's house, a local
artist Lee knows who built the birdcage that hangs in the library.
No one was home but Lee said it would be all right to look around.
We saw Leigh's workshop that had a huge glass wall on one side that
overlooked a still pond. In the workshop were huge unfinished rocking
horses that were carved out of wood! The floor was littered with
shaved wood. It was amazing. Lee said that Leigh and her husband
and sons built the house themselves. Every window was a different
shape and size. The house itself looked like something out of a
fantasy novel. Ivy covered the face of it. On the drive home Lee
told me that for Easter Leigh rolls joints and hides them for the
adults to find while the children hunt for eggs! I thought this
was fabulous and laughed. He also told me that one time she came
home to find her pot plants had been stolen right out of her garden.
I marveled at this. Now, tonight, I am feeling tired, ill. Frustrated
that I can't write as well as I'd like to.
Out here I'm unable to imagine city life again. The
things I became and felt in Chicago seem so strange here. Adulthood
baffles me. You're supposed to have accomplished and overcome certain
things, things that are a mystery to me. You're supposed to be "someone"
by a certain age. What am I? One afternoon Santi had said, "At least
I'm doing well for a twenty-seven-year-old." I had wanted to cry
out, 'And what if I'm not feeling as stable as you when I'm your
age?' By whose standards am I supposed to live and love myself?
I can't always be content with dreaming and writing. There comes
a time when you have to let these things go, outgrow them. But if
it's meant for me to live in a fantasy then so be it. It's a charming
way of life. It's who I am. I enjoy feeling and seeing things that
are not so important to others. Things that might not ever "get
me anywhere". This is who I am.
Rain, rain, rain. Looking through Lee's copy of "Writer's
Market" I find myself excited, and feeling that lingering incompleteness.
Is getting published so vital? Does my writing have to fit the standards
of the publishing world? Do I have to adjust my talents to be accepted
in the literary community? I'll be turning twenty soon and wonder
if I can afford to continue being foolish. Is there such a thing?
Does one outgrow himself? Are there really mistakes in life, or
do things happen because they're supposed to? Anything is possible,
right? At moments I can feel the power of the lesson of being here
and alive. With the same force comes memory, a scattered past. The
feelings. The people. The streets. The steps. The breezes. The smallest
to the biggest. Or, are the smallest the most prodigious? I remember
Maggie and I sitting in my car, blocks from school and smoking.
All those days painstakingly recorded in this continuous diary.
Life. I had a good day. Felt no rage. Thank God. Lee suggested having
dad and Bell come visit. I'd like that. No, I'd love it. But I know
they would not come. Americans are more fun than Assyrians. Assyrians
are serious people. Americans are outgoing, silly, even immature.
Assyrians are stuffy, old, no matter what age. But not me.
Warm out. Performed for the horses. Sang and danced
while they watched and listened with full attention. I got a standing
ovation! Andy was affectionate as always. He is young and handsome,
muscular. He walks up to me and smells me. I brush him. I have yet
to get paid for my services here, and am angry with Lee. But I will
get over it. I only tell myself to write, read, learn. Here's the
rest of my life. 'Grow, Emil,' I tell myself. 'Have your faults,
you're human, but recognize them and love yourself. I know sometimes
you feel alone, and sometimes you get angry with yourself, but you're
doing the best you can. You may not always know it but you're fine.'
Last night Hightops would not go to Lee when he called
her from the other room. She lay next to me and sighed. He yelled
that I push her off the bed. I pushed a little, but she would not
go. I didn't have the heart to use greater force. I called out to
Lee to come and get her like he usually does and he did. But he
was angry and said something snotty. This morning I talked to him
about it. I told him that kind of aggression was not necessary,
that he'd been out of line. Lee was not understanding and I walked
away upset. There were tears in my eyes and it felt as though it
were the end of the world, even though I knew it wasn't. It was
an awful way to start a most beautiful morning. I felt that he had
taken out his anger on me and how dare he? Still, I wasn't about
to go running home back to Chicago. I would tough it out, but how?
He later apologized. And when he came back from town he brought
me a puppy. I was shocked, not delighted. It felt like he was trying
to make up for his actions but was overcompensating. I did not want
a puppy! What am I going to do with it? I already know I'll have
to leave Eartha Kat behind when I leave here. He hugged me and kissed
me on the head. Frankly, I don't want these acts of affection. I
only want to laugh and work with him. Nothing more. Nothing less.
Dad called and I mentioned to him Lee's invitation for him and Bell
to come to the farm. He said something about thinking about it,
then gave me advice I did not want or need. I told him none of this
was his business and we hung up with each other. Although Lee and
I forgave each other on the porch, in the sun, I am still hurt and
confused by the whole thing, and cannot tell if being here is a
good experience or a bad one.
The day started out well. I took a shower outside
for the first time. Planted spinach and radishes in the garden.
Then went for a walk but had to come back home because I felt scared.
The clouds had rolled in by this point, but what was I so afraid
of? There has to be something wrong with me. But what? Some awful
feeling. I feel like I have emotionally and physically collapsed.
I burned a finger making a fire. The stinging I feel now reminds
me of a childhood incident. We were on a family road trip in Iran
when an old man on a bicycle rode straight into the street without
looking. Of course dad struck the man who rolled, bike and all,
onto the hood of the car. I remember the old man rolling up the
windshield, then back onto the hood. We had to wait there in the
car for what felt like hours and hours to me, a small child. I crawled
into the front seat and sat with mom, who desperately tried to keep
me entertained and distracted. Gosh, she herself was then only in
her twenties. Somehow I got a hold of the car lighter and when I
saw the flaming orange rings inside I put my thumb on them. The
pain was sharp and persistent then as it is now. I feel like I did
that day when I was only four, or five.
Our guest Dan just said to Lee, "He's only nineteen!?
I couldn't even spell my name at nineteen!" After dinner and after
I got the kitchen squared away I thought of those I love, and how
alone we all are in our lives. But I am so grateful for the way
things are. Everything is perfect.
Planted flower seeds. Dan left and I realize what
a nice man he really is. I woke up smiling. But by dinner I was
in an entirely different mood. Working and living with Lee is very
difficult. He's going through a lot, financially and emotionally.
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